The Forbidden Quest is a 1993 pseudo-documentary written and directed by Peter Delpeut.[2]
The Forbidden Quest | |
---|---|
Directed by | Peter Delpeut |
Written by | Peter Delpeut |
Starring | Joseph O'Conor Roy Ward |
Cinematography | Stef Tijdink |
Edited by | Menno Boerma |
Music by | Loek Dikker |
Distributed by | Ariel Film Zeitgeist Films Kino Video[1] |
Release date |
|
Running time | 75 minutes |
Country | Netherlands |
Language | English |
The film won the 1994 International Fantasy Film Special Jury Award at the Fantasporto (aka Festival Internacional de Cinema do Porto) in Portugal.
The film won the 1993 Special Jury Prize at the Nederlands Film Festival (aka Nederlandse Filmdagen) It was released in Netherlands theaters on 8 April 1993.
Plot
editA documentary filmmaker hears of J.C. Sullivan who may know the fate of the Hollandia, a Norwegian ship that sailed to Antarctica in 1905 and disappeared.[3] J.C. Sullivan was the carpenter on that ill-fated voyage and is the last known surviving crewmember of the Hollandia. The filmmaker interviews Sullivan who is also able to supply him with canisters of old film footage which back up the unbelievable accounts that Sullivan describes.
The film, made in 1993,[4] is presented as a 1941 documentary[5] of a series of events that occurred in 1905. The footage of the fictional expedition is from other polar expeditions of the time.[6] These clips are interspersed with the interview of J.C. Sullivan.
Cast
edit- Joseph O'Conor as J.C. Sullivan
- Roy Ward as the Interviewer/filmmaker
Reception
editThe New York Times' Janet Maslin praised the "honest power of the film's archival scenes" while condemning its narrative as slow-paced, portentous, and poorly written.[7]
Notes
edit- ^ Turner Classic Movies
- ^ BFI
- ^ IFFR
- ^ DVD Talk
- ^ Chicago Reader
- ^ Torino Film Festival
- ^ Maslin, Janet (1994-01-05). "The Forbidden Quest". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-11-12.